Monday, 8 July 2013

Making miniature petit point pieces


The piece that started it all
Many moons ago, I posted about a mini petit point broach that I deconstructed and made a pattern from.  And then did nothing else with for a long time.


Well in my holiday crafting mode I decided to do something about it.  I had some 40 count silk gauze that I had bought last time (that means there are 40 threads in each direction per inch in the gauze).  I dug it out, printed off a copy of my pattern and got started.

The first step was to create a frame to hold the gauze.  When doing cross stitch, I never bothered doing this as the tension in the stitches balanced out in my hands.  On the other hand, petit point is like half cross stitches- that meant the thread will always be pulling in one diagonal direction.

Because my pattern was  40 stitches across, I knew that my finished piece would be one inch (2.5 cm) across so I marked a 2 inch (5 cm) square to cut out on a bit of scrap cardboard

To stop the card from folding or tearing, I folded the sides over a few times and glued them down in order to reinforce the sides.  Then I taped a 3 inch square of silk gauze into place and got started.
Stitching was fairly simple. If you have done cross stitch before, you can do this.  The biggest  challenge was, of course, the scale!  Strong light is your friend if you try this!  Some sort of hands-free magnifier would also be advisable, but the only one I had was 2-4X magnification and between the awkwardness of it and the low power, it was fairly useless.
 I ended up making my original colour version and I am planning on mounting it in the original fitting if I can. 

One other thing I tried since I was on a run, was to dye the silk gauze using alcohol ink (aka a sharpie).  It worked really great, and I got to test another cross stitch design I've not posted up here yet...  This one was interesting as I tried a bit of backstiching in a lighter cotton thread (the designs were done with a single thread of DMC cotton), and the mountain of Cori Celesti was made using glow-in-the-dark thread.  Although suspect only I will ever know that since such a small amount of thread doesn't glow significantly.
What do you think?



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